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So, my father (96) was recently diagnosed with stage IV cancer. It's very hard, but I'm slowly coming to terms with it due to his age. The other and more complicated issue is my mother (95). She was the one who I always thought was the one who more had her head on her shoulders and was independent. However, she's completely lost it about how she will be alone and how she won't be able to get anywhere (she stopped driving years ago and my father was the one taking her everywhere), etc. etc. She has macular degeneration so her vision is not that great. She has other health issues but can still get around the house. However, between her and my cousin, they are starting to put the pressure on me to move back home. My mother is on the East Coast and I am in the LA area. I'm 69 years old and retiring in 8 months. My plan was to move to the Southern Sierra about 3 hours north of Los Angeles. So.....do I just trash that idea, move 3000 miles back east? And then when it's over and she's gone....then what? I just pick up and move 3,000 miles back again? It was easy to move around a lot when I was younger but at my age, not so much. So I really feel that if I move back East, that's pretty much it for me. No going back. And I hate it there. I would be more that willing to have my mother come live with me once she's alone, but I know she won't do it. I'm at a loss as to what to do. I don't want to feel like a horrible person, but at the same time I don't want to end up spending my golden years/last years on the planet 3000 miles away in a place that I hate. I will do what I can for her from here but I really, really, really don't want to uproot myself and my plans for my own [dwindling] future....

Don’t do it. Just say it to all concerned. They are very old. Too old. You’re no spring chicken either. Go forward with your plans. You don’t mention if you are married have children or grandchildren. There are many ways to connect with doctors and healthcare /aged care professionals without being face to face Look up service providers through their local council and govt aged care services for organisations that provide drivers for things like medical appointments etc.
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Reply to PandabearAUS
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Don't move back East!!!!! Try to find other solutions such as getting your parents into a facility of some sort where you are. I don't mean to be harsh at all, but the reality is that at your parents' ages, they don't have many years left.
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Reply to JanPeck123
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Don’t uproot your life for hers. Time lost can’t be regained. Visit and support her as best you can. Your offer for her to move closer to you is generous and kind but make sure you have a plan that doesn’t involve giving up all of your independence to take care of her if she takes you up on the offer. You are at an important crossroads and decision making time. Follow your gut and then be at peace with the choice you make.
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Reply to jemfleming
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The answer to your question is pretty simple. No, you don't trash your own retirement to move across the country to become your 95 year-old mother's companion and caregiver.

There are other options. Like hiring a live-in caregiver/companion for her who drives.
Or her moving to a senior community where she won't be alone. Many of these places have their own busses or vans and they take the residents shopping or on other types of outings. Many also offer meals and housekeeping.

Your mother has other options besides you giving up your retirement and moving in with her. It's time to explore some.

In the meantime, please don't let your mother or your family pressure you into making a decision that no doubt you will regret.
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Reply to BurntCaregiver
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It's hard to feel compelled when it's your parents. I knew how much I loved both my mom and dad, and who knows what I would do if they were still here.
However, after having first hand at trying to take care of an elder with dementia, (my aunt), I realized I could not do it and those that were pushing me to give up my life and move to another state to do it were trying to use me so that they didn't feel the burden of it.
I am not retired. I am single, however, and I work. They (cousins) felt that because I am single, I can come in and just uproot my life and take care of her. It was maddening. Every time I looked, I was getting texts from my cousins, and my aunt's neighbor. It was like, "Hello? I have suggested a care giver, facility. Everything." They just wanted me to give up my life and assist. They're excuses were one had a family, the other worked days and evenings. So? I don't work? I don't have a life? It was offensive. When you put your foot down and let them all know that you will not give up your life, that mom needs to make some decisions that don't include you moving in with her, then things will start changing.
I tell you, when I put my foot down, gave up POA, they all backed off and I don't hear a word from any of them. I rather like it that way. Peace!
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BurntCaregiver Oct 16, 2024
@Tiredniece23

Even if you didn't work it shouldn't make any difference. Your cousins were way out of line to expect you to take over your needy aunt's care. They were not owed an explanation why you couldn't take care of their mother and certainly you don't have to justify why you say no with reasons like having to work or anything else.

A plain 'No' is sufficient explanation.

I had a similar situation some time ago. I was in a car accident. I had some injuries and took time off from work. I wasn't in a hurry to get back to work because I really didn't need to.

See when there's a woman in a house who isn't "working" people who need child/elder care get pushy and believe they are entitled to her time and service. That woman at home is available for everyone's child and elder care needs because she doesn't "work".

Nope. I don't even think so. I didn't watch anyone's kids or old people. After refusing these requests for a couple months, the asking stopped.

Good for you outting your foot down and giving up the POA. That was totally the right move.
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I would move back. I gave up everything for my parents.
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MargaretMcKen Oct 16, 2024
Perhaps they don't 'want to give up everything'. Did your parents 'give up everything' for you?
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I am in the same situation as you. I live in the Bay Area and my now deceased mother and father are in NYC. I did not relocate 100 percent, I go back every other month to visit my 96 yo father who is in a nursing home for a few weeks. I am 69 and retired. I have siblings who live near my parents so it is a little easier with other family nearby.

I did not move back because my only child and grandkids live in the Bay Area. I want to be part of their lives.

Don’t move back because you deserve to have the life you want. . Try to figure out a way to make it work.

Good luck navigating this. It is hard.
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Reply to Hothouseflower
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Denise from the sound of your last post, your mother 'isn't all that interested' in setting up helping options BECAUSE it would reduce her ability to put pressure on YOU to do what she really wants.
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Beatty Sep 25, 2024
My LO wasn't interested in having a paid aide on weekends. Why?
Because this little bunny would hop to it. When I stopped hopping, just like magic.. my LO did become interested.
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I think you answered your own question! Don't do it. I don't even think I'd ask Mom to come stay out here with you. Your Mom should go into AL when your Dad is gone. My Mom passed 10 years ago - I retired 6 years ago, and had just begun to enjoy life when Dad became ill and needed care, so aside from 9 months where I was taking care of my dying husband, I've been full-time caregiver for my 96yr old Dad. Now I'm 24/7 live-in caregiver for Dad who has severe Lewy Body Dementia. I'm 68yrs now and wondering if I'll ever have a life - I worn out! Go live your dream! My kids have strict orders to place me in AL when my time comes - I'm not their responsibility. We have to make sure we take care of ourselves until the end and not depend on our kids. My 2 cents! Worn out daughter! (I took care of my Mom for many years as well, and took a leave of absence many years ago when her Mom - my grandma got cancer and needed full time care). Yup, worn out!
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Denise91606 Sep 24, 2024
I'm so sorry you're dealing with that and I really hope you will get a break you so deserve soon! I am trying to help my mom as best as I can from here, like giving her phone numbers of several senior transport options in her area that can take her to the store, to doctors, etc. if my dad can't drive, but....she just doesn't seem all that interested. Also want to get her online to set up automatic payments with some of the recurring bills such as utilities, internet, etc. so she would have that many less checks to write since she has a hard time with that but all I get is "I'll let you know". In todays high tech world, there really are so many things that I could and am willing to do from this end that would help her -- she just has to let me.
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I am sorry your Dad is so old & ill.
I am sorry your Mom is so old & sight impaired.

You know you cannot fix these things. You can choose how you proceed. Be their adult daughter (guessing daughter?) that supports them. Calls, visits if able, even an extended visit (if funds, work, other commitments allow).

What if you were a son. A man? Would that change things?

Q1. Are you the only person in the world to take care of your aging parents?
A1. No. It takes a 'village'.
Medical staff, hospital care, hospice sometimes, assisted living.

"between her and my cousin, they are starting to put the pressure on me to move back home".

Q2. Why is that?
A2. People don't like change. Your Mom (like many many others) may be seeking to keep her life as stable & the same as she can. Human nature I guess.

Many attempt to install a live-in-daughter-maid to avoid change. Avoid facing the truth.

The truth is your Dad's illness is a total game-changer & her failing vision is real. These changes ARE happening. To HER. Therefore Mom is the one that must change her life. Not you.

Thoughts?
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Reply to Beatty
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…….and you should NOT move back! My God! You need to enjoy what retirement years you have worked toward. Your mother needs to go to a retirement home where her needs will be met. And your cousin should stay out of it as far as pressuring you to move 3,000 miles back! Your parents don’t have much time left so make provisions for them to move within the area they live with assistance or skilled nursing.

My kids all moved out to California and one does have a home in the Sierras to go skiing. I would never, ever force them to move back East! They deserve to live their best life and not come back to an area they despise just to babysit their elderly mother! Their dad is already in a nursing home with a rare form of dementia- not putting any of that on my children.
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Suzy23 Sep 24, 2024
I totally agree with you, Katy. And I feel for you with your husband having FTD. My dad had behavioral variant FTD.
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I agree with most others who have replied. You should NOT relocate. So the options are she can hire help at home, move into AL in or near her current town, or move to an AL near you or some other relative.

If she chooses one near you, bear in mind this will mean you are going to be the person she calls when she’s upset about whatever or if her condition worsens. It can be a lot.

You may be able to visit them and may be able to help with moving, etc. there you can do what feels manageable to you.

I don’t think you’re a horrible person at all. You seem 100% relatable to me.
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Katybr Sep 25, 2024
Suzy, my husband doesn’t have the Behavioral Variant, but, it’s still horrible. His face is frozen in time - no emotion or empathy for over a year. He’s in a nursing home since April 2 thank God. I couldn’t take this 24/7. He isn’t mobile or verbal. I can’t do it. Palliative Care and Hospice told me I’d be the one going first unless I removed him from the home. I really thought I was dying a slow death. He has less than a year left.
I remember when he was diagnosed in 2021 we were all so happy it wasn’t Alzheimer’s. Little did we know this is far more insidious and cruel. Ugh! I try to educate people on this FTD curse and finding out there’s more and more of it than we thought. It’s a brain disease that will hit early in life rather than later. So, late 50’s isn’t out of the ordinary. 60 Minutes did a segment on it and you can watch it on YouTube. Pretty eye opening.
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Another thing, you do not use your own money for her care. If she has a house, she sells it to live in an AL. She needs in home care she pays for it or gets Medicaid. There are options out there, use them.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Denise91606, I tried to get my Mom, who like your Mom had macular degeneration, to move into senior living where the place had apartments with the same square footage as their house. Nope, never, nada. She would not budge, even though my Dad said he would start packing immediately.


It wasn't until I started with macular degeneration myself that I finally understood why my Mom refused to move. Mom had lived in that house for 30 years so she pretty much knew where everything was located. If she moved, she would find it difficult to locate things as at 95+ her memory wasn't as sharp as years prior. Also, that explained why Mom would quickly put away the groceries when I delivered them, before Dad could try to help, as each item had its place.


We may assume one parent will outlive the other, I though my Mom would outlive my Dad, but a serious fall changed all that. Mom spent her final months in a skilled nursing home, and Dad sold the house and moved into senior living.
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Reply to freqflyer
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M ‘won’t do it’ – ie move closer to you. You have just as many rights to say that you ‘won’t do it’ – ie move yourself so that she doesn’t have to. M complains about ‘how she will be alone and how she won't be able to get anywhere’. You response should be ‘move here and you won’t be alone and stuck’. End of conversation.

M ‘can still get around the house’, but she probably can’t get out. At age 95, the world shrinks down to a few rooms, and it doesn’t matter much what’s outside. However you can still get out, and it does matter to you. It’s common sense that you choose the place where M’s ‘few rooms’ are. That’s being a ‘sensible person’, not a ‘horrible person’. Chances are that if you could pick up her East Coast rooms and dump them on the West Coast, she would have no problem. It’s the way her rooms look, familiar furniture etc, not where they are.

It's also possible that M sees you being close to her on the East Coast is going to be like it was years ago - you and she can have great times together. Just like the 'going home' meaning going to a childhood home, not the most recent 'home'.

Could you arrange respite for M somewhere near where you want to live? See if you could bring with her a piece of furniture that she likes, to make it look a bit familiar – pictures are easy to transport. If she spent a month there, with you visiting and a few outings, it might drop down her opposition. I’d say go ahead with both: your move to the Southern Sierra, followed by her move to local respite, so that she “knows more about where you will be living”. You don't need to stress that it's permanent.

PS Someone pointed out recently that the local TV commentators become important ‘friends’ for housebound elders – much more so than the occasional doctor’s visit. See if you can set up a local TV inside the respite place to get feed from what M is used to 'back home'. I know you can do that with radio, because my DH uses the radio station feed from close to our farm, inside his new shed 1500 kms away - what they talk about is familiar and he prefers it to the new local stations. M might almost forget that she isn't 'back home'.
PPS DH says you can do it but it requires a 'smart' TV, connected to the internet.
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Reply to MargaretMcKen
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You don’t move back East .
Your mother is 95 , she had her retirement . You deserve to have yours as well . You live where you want to live .

Either Mom goes into assisted living where she is , or by you , those are her choices at this point . She’s the one that is 95 and will need care . You should not be the one to have to move . Don’t have mom live with you either .

She wants you to move in with her and prop up her false independence . Elders should not expect their children to move , uproot their lives , in an attempt to avoid the changes the elder is facing .
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Reply to waytomisery
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Read your update.

At 95 it may make better sense to put Mom in A/L on east coast if she refuses to move out west. I would have resources in Bakersfield and on the east coast. I would not base the decision on her doctors. Doctors retire and relocate. Mom is probably outliving many of her doctors at this point.

This is very touchy but can you partner with Dad on some of Mom's long term care decisions? If he was behind you Mom might be swayed. It is a very touchy conversation to have. You would want to have a soft script and I think the conversation is many times better done in person.
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Denise91606 Sep 23, 2024
Unfortunately, my dad is probably the last person she would listen to. She's done nothing but complain about him for really dumb reasons for the last 20 years and even with his recent diagnosis, was still continuing to complain, until I shut that shit down and told her that unless she finds him in bed with a hooker, stop whining about about him over petty, inconsequential BS.
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No, 100% you do not do that.

I absolve you of that burden your family is trying to put on you.

At their ages, they could literally drop dead at any given moment. My 96 year old aunt was trucking along and one day had a terrible headache and a few hours later was dead from a brain aneurysm.
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Reply to Southernwaver
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My SIL's (he's 70) mom is in her 90s and widowed. She moved to independent living which she can still manage. He has not moved to her state though he visits more frequently.

I am sorry for this diagnosis but in all honestly a move to a GOOD ALF would afford your mother more loving attention and more activity than you could ever provide. I would make it clear at the get go that this isn't happening. If you enable it at all it WILL happen.

My SIL now is retired. His wife, my daughter will soon. He is a real hiker and and always out walking. They will soon be traveling together. His mother would NOT want this (and she suffers from Wet AMD as well) for him. She would not want him sacrificing some of the most free time in his life to her. I have long made it clear my daughter would NEVER be allowed to do so either. I am sorry your parents haven't made it clear to you that it isn't happening.

As far as the rest of the family I couldn't be less interested in what they all think. You shouldn't be either. Just my own opinion. You are all grown up and your choices will be your own.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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Here's the thing. No, you don't trash your retirement. But you CAN and should ask your mom to make the caregiving easier for YOU.

Investigate ILs, ALs and Nursing Homes in the area you intend to move to. Mom's needs may change, so visit places with different levels of care.
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Beatty Sep 24, 2024
"Mom's needs may change"

I like to use the word *may* too, as I feel wrong predicting *will change*. Although at 95..

An elderly man the other week told me his next *real estate* would have a few rose bushes & lovely green grass on top.
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NO! Don't do it! Your mother is old. Look for assisted living places in her area for her. Don't uproot your life to move to an area where you don't know anyone and have to get familiar in areas you hate.

I had a similar issue with my sister and my nieces getting angry because I wouldn't become the POA for their mother. One lives in California. I had just retired because my job was outsourced, so they thought that I had a bunch of free time on my hands. Little did they know that I was prepping to go back into a field of work by taking classes, getting updated on immunizations and physicals. Besides, my older sister is about herself and could care less if I had rent money for the month or not.

Don't let your mother and your cousin pressure you into moving back losing out on your retirement plans.

Get your retirement set up to your plans and don't let senior brat tantrums manipulate you into ruining your plans. Trust me, they will get over it.
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Reply to Scampie1
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Never do that!! You've earned your retirement, and you deserve it. Taking care of a 95-year-old woman is extremely limiting, and you'll have no life of your own. It's very selfish for her to expect that you'd give up your life to make hers - um, better? longer? happier? When it won't be that way anyway.

People that age aren't usually happy. You can count on it. Mom and Dad should have come up with some other plan for when one of them passed on. That's on them.

Check out some assisted livings near you. They often have their own doctors, nurses, clinics, all the medical things she'll need. Her present doctors being around to take care of her isn't a given. They quit, they move, they have a baby. Make it clear that she can't move in with you. That would be a disaster, trust me. At an AL, she'll get food, entertainment, new friends.

Mom didn't plan. Mom won't move. Mom doesn't care if you have your own happy life. Maybe that makes her the horrible person. But wait - maybe neither of you is horrible! Maybe you each have a right to be happy!
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Reply to Fawnby
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Thank you for the answers so far and providing your own perspective. I love my parents so very much, but the thought of upending the rest of my life is just too much for me. I like the idea of bringing mom to an assisted living facility near me (would probably have to be Bakersfield) and when the time is right I am going to suggest it to her. I doubt she will go for it though -- which, I do understand. She's used to the doctors she has and I can certainly see why she wouldn't want to change up her health care at this point. I hope she will, conversely, come to understand why I need to stay where I'm at.
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waytomisery Sep 23, 2024
Healthcare at 95 yo usually does not include complicated planning or heroics.
Her records could be sent to new doctors to review and be up to speed .
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Start scouting assisted livings in Mom's home town. You can do this remotely from LA.
As a backup see what assisted livings are available in Southern Sierra. Gather information and see what your options are.

Also, if you come back east for any reasons if you can tastefully/respectfully do this I'd start donating stuff to goodwill etc. This may be easier since Mom is partially blind.

If Mom wants to stay on east coast I would not fight it. I was friends with a woman who was in her high 90's. Daughter moved her from east coast to a facility on west coast. The woman hated it. She was moved back to a facility on the east coast.
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Reply to brandee
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Well, the good news is you come from a stong gene pool so you are most likely to live to 100 or older.

Sometimes you have to make decision based on your gut. At close to 70 I'd stick to your original plan.

It appears you have two options. After Dad is gone find her assisted living back east or bring her to the Southern Sierra and find her assisted living in the Southern Sierra. For you it would be easier having her in assisted living in Southern Sierra but if she refuses find her something in her home town while you stay out west(this will be harder for you but many families make this work.)

You've worked hard your entire life and you don't want to be on the east coast. This is not an option.
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Reply to brandee
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No, no, no!

As I learned here, your Mom has had her life.

It's time for you to live yours.

"I can't possibly do that!" is a fine answer to your mom.

Offer to help your mom find a place (you can tour Assisted Livings over FaceTime or similar.)
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Reply to cxmoody
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You’re not a horrible person and you don’t move back. There’s no need or reason to uproot your life for your mother as her future is much more limited than yours. Chances are she will no longer be able to live independently, but that’s not on you to solve other than to help her find a new place in assisted living. Ignore the pressure, don’t respond to it at all as you know it’s not what’s good for either of you. Offer to help her find a new place, if she declines, that’s on her. She will need more help and a new place, but that can look like a lot of things other than you uprooting your life
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